Foucault News

News and resources on French thinker Michel Foucault (1926-1984)

This is such a wonderful interview. Good to see it resurface.

stuartelden's avatarProgressive Geographies

I’d not seen this before – fifteen minutes of video in preparation for the Chomsky debate between Foucault and Fons Elders. Thanks to Sjoerd van Tuinen and Elena Loizidou for sharing this.

Update: Jeremy Crampton has more news on this here, including the link to the book of the interview transcript, which only seems to be available on Fons Elders’s own site.

Update 2: Aphelis has a lot more information on the debate itself here.

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M. Alejandra Energici, José Antonio Román B., Claudio Ramos Z. y Sebastián Ibarra G., Solidaridad en la gubernamentalidad liberal avanzada: un análisis en piezas publicitarias, Polis, Revista Latinoamerica, 32, 2012

Further info

Resúmenes
El artículo presenta una reflexión sobre la manera en que en los últimos veinte años la promoción de un determinado tipo de solidaridad en Chile ha contribuido a la conformación de una gubernamentalidad liberal avanzada, necesaria para la instalación de un programa neoliberal. La reflexión se enmarca en los aportes teóricos de Michel Foucault y tiene por objeto empírico piezas de publicidad de promoción de la solidaridad emitidas en Chile entre los años 2009 y 2010, que han sido analizadas en el contexto del proyecto Fondecyt 1090534. Se presentan tres tipos de resultados: (a) se describen los sectores sociales que se construyen como agentes de la solidaridad, (b) se reflexiona sobre las prácticas solidarias más promovidas y (c) se indaga en la forma en que se interpela a los sujetos a ser solidarios.

Abstract
The article presents an analysis on the way in which during the last twenty years the promotion of a certain kind of solidarity in Chile has contributed to the formation of an advanced liberal governmentality, necessary for the installation of a neoliberal agenda. The reflection follows the theoretical contributions of Michel Foucault and focuses on the empirical analysis of ads that promote solidarity, issued in Chile between 2009 and 2010, in the context of the project FONDECYT 1090534. We present three types of results: (a) description of the social sectors that are constructed as agents of solidarity, (b) analysis on the most promoted solidarity practices and (c) investigation on the way it adresses the people in order to raise their solidarity.

Palabras claves :
solidarité, gouvernementalité libérale, publicité
Keywords :
solidarity, liberal governmentality, advertising
Palabras claves :
solidaridad, gubernamentalidad liberal, publicidad
Palavras chaves :
a solidariedade, governamentalidade liberal, a publicidade

Ideland, M., Malmberg, C.
Governing ‘eco-certified children’ through pastoral power: critical perspectives on education for sustainable development
(2014) Environmental Education Research, published online Feb 2014

Abstract
This article analyses how ‘eco-certified children’ are constructed as desirable subjects in teaching materials addressing education for sustainable development. We are interested in how discourses structure this cherished practice and how this practice has become ‘natural’ and obvious for us. A discourse analysis is carried out by looking at the material through the lens of Foucault’s notion of pastoral power. The analysis departs from teaching material addressing issues on sustainable development: (1) textbooks for primary and secondary school; (2) games targeted at preschool and school children; and (3) children’s books about sustainable development. The results show that the discourse of education for sustainable development is characterized by scientific and mathematical objectivity and faith in technological development. It emphasizes the right of the individual and the obligation to make free, however ‘correct’, choices. In the teaching materials, the eco-certified child therefore emerges as knowing, conscious, rational, sacrificing and active. This child is constructed through knitting together personal guilt with global threats, detailed individual activities with rescuing the flock and the planet. In a concluding discussion, we discuss how ESD is framed in a neoliberal ideology. With the help of ESD, an economic discourse becomes dressed in an almost poetic language.

Author Keywords
discourse; education for sustainable development; governmentality; power; teaching material

DOI: 10.1080/13504622.2013.879696

Boland, T.
Critique is a thing of this world: Towards a genealogy of critique
(2014) History of the Human Sciences, 27 (1), pp. 108-123.


Abstract

Although Foucault was clearly a critical thinker, his approach also provides for the possibility of a genealogy of critique. Such an approach problematizes critique, and I trace the emergent problematization of critique in Foucault’s later works, and briefly in Latour and Boltanski. From this I move on to the ‘critical problematic’, that is, how critique operates as a form of power/knowledge, as a discourse that creates subjects through a critical regime of truth and critical truth-games. Specifically, I argue that critique is a discourse which transforms and unmasks other ‘truth-claims’, replacing them with a starker vision of reality, which in the end is also a specific cultural vision. To elaborate this view, I return to Foucault’s discussion of Kant, his late lectures on Cynicism and also on ordo-liberalism. The wider circulation of critical discourses is demonstrated through an analysis of ‘cool’ or critical consumerism. In conclusion, the relationship between critique, crisis and modernity is considered.

Author Keywords
critique; cynicism; discourse; Michel Foucault; power/knowledge

DOI: 10.1177/0952695113500972

Murray, S.J.
Allegories of the Bioethical: Reading J.M. Coetzee’s Diary of a Bad Year
(2014) Journal of Medical Humanities, February 2014

Abstract
This essay reads J.M. Coetzee’s novel, Diary of a Bad Year, as an occasion to problematize contemporary bioethical (and neoliberal) paradigms. Coetzee’s rhetorical strategies are analyzed to better understand the “scene of address” within which ethical claims can be voiced. Drawing on Foucault’s Socratic understanding of ethics as the self’s relation to itself, self-relation is explored through the rhetorical figure of catachresis. The essay ultimately argues that the ethical voice emerges when the terms-terms by which I relate to myself, to others, to my own body, and to the bodies of others-are themselves subject to catachrestic refiguration. © 2014 Springer Science+Business Media New York.

Author Keywords

Bioethics; Catachresis; J.M. Coetzee; Michel Foucault; Rhetoric

DOI: 10.1007/s10912-014-9273-9

One of those ubiquitous internet quizzes that circulate. This one’s on BuzzFeed: Which philosopher are you?, Buzzfeed, 1 March 2014

To tell the truth, I was surprised that I actually got Michel Foucault in response to the somewhat left field questions  – but years of exposure to his work is bound to rub off somehow!

Update September 2025. The images on the original page are no longer live but are archived on the Wayback machine. Linked to above.

Bowden, G.
Disorders of inattention and hyperactivity: The production of responsible subjects
(2014) History of the Human Sciences, 27 (1), pp. 88-107.

Abstract
This article explores some of the normative commitments which persist in the literature on behavioural interventions for disorders of inattention and hyperactivity. These programmatic texts grapple with a contradiction: on one hand, they posit individuals who cannot be held responsible for their behaviour on the grounds that it is pathological, rather than wilful; on the other hand, these texts are written for individuals diagnosed with these disorders and for related authorities, obliged to mitigate said behaviour on the grounds that it is disvalued and impairing. Facing the practical problem of alleviating impairing and disruptive behaviours, this literature has also consistently expressed a goal of producing individuals who demonstrate self-control. Self-control, in this context, however, is not simply the manifestation of wilful autonomy over one’s body, but the capacity to be ascribed responsibility for one’s actions. In the move from bodily control to self-control, institutions responsible for treating those diagnosed with these disorders produce what Foucault has called a ‘political economy of illegality’, where the management of disvalued behaviour is not the eradication of said behaviour, but a redistribution of the right to reward and punish based on the individualization of action.

Author Keywords
ADHD; disorder; Michel Foucault; responsibility; social control

DOI: 10.1177/0952695113503325

Séminaire Actualités Foucault s6PDF of flyer

Maier, H.O.
Soja’s thirdspace, Foucault’s heterotopia and de Certeau’s practice: Time-space and social geography in emergent Christianity
(2013) Historical Social Research, 38 (3), pp. 76-92.

Further info

Abstract
This essay uses analytical tools developed by Edward Soja, Michel Foucault, and Michel de Certeau to investigate time-space configurations in the religious movements inaugurated by Jesus and promoted by Paul. The article begins with an account of the domination of time as a conceptual tool for analyzing both figures and their teachings to establish the context for an alternative space-time reading of the data represented in the New Testament and extra-canonical sources. Jesus’ proclamation of the Kingdom of God is placed in the context of the monetization and hence disruption of traditional kinship and social structures. His parables, sayings, and the traditions associated with him represent thirdspace performances of his rural world. His proclamation of the Kingdom of God coheres with Foucault’s notion of heterotopia in that it places listeners in places outside of place. His articulation of behaviours coincides with de Certeau’s notion of tactics inserted within dominant social strategies. Through a reading of Paul’s message against the backdrop of urban poverty Paul’s motif of the church as body is seen as a thirdspace articulation of social groups, heterotopic place outside of place, and communal solidarity within the urban context of the Roman Empire.

Author Keywords
Galilee; Household; Jesus; Monetization; Paul; Roman city; Space-time

Didier Mineur, Après Foucault. La philosophie politique en France depuis les années 1980, Cités, 2013/4 (n° 56), Pages 51 – 76

DOI: 10.3917/cite.056.0051

Premières lignes
Il pourrait sembler paradoxal de faire de l’œuvre de Michel Foucault une borne dans l’histoire de la philosophie politique en France, et le point de fuite à partir duquel se lisent les différentes perspectives contemporaines, puisque Foucault, on le sait, récusait pour lui-même, à l’instar d’Hannah Arendt, le titre de philosophe. Pourtant, de son propre aveu, c’est bien de philosophie qu’il s’occupait….

Plan de l’article

Retour sur Foucault
La réévaluation de la démocratie depuis les années 1980
Aujourd’hui : revitaliser la démocratie
Demain : les enjeux à penser